Wimer v. Yellin

Appellant and appellee are adjoining landowners in Lower Merion Township. Both front on Lancaster Avenue, appellee's frontage being 83 feet and appellant's 160 feet. These lots, and others thereabouts, are subject to a common building restriction or condition, which is as follows: "No more than one house should at any time be erected upon the above described lot of land, and further that all buildings except steps, cellar doors, and open porches, hereafter erected upon said lot of land, shall be set back at least 85 feet northeastwardly from the middle line of Lancaster Avenue." On each lot has been erected an expensive private dwelling which stands the required distance from Lancaster Avenue. These houses were built some 25 years ago.

Appellant, desiring to make changes in his property, in addition to modernizing the house, proceeded to shut *Page 35 out much of the noise and sight of traffic coming from this much-traveled highway by a stone wall nine feet high, enclosing the front part of the yard, with the exception of the driveway. The litigation is over this improvement. As it reached the house, it rose in height, connecting with the building, and continued, enclosing part of the lot in the rear, the walls there being 18 feet high. The outer surface was some inches in from the line of the adjoining property. The best material was being used and the design was artistic and is now partly erected. The walls were plastered and the lines were broken by buttresses, adding to its strength as well as to the appearance. The rear portion or "wistaria room" was without roof except by poles on which vines were to grow. As indicated, on the north side, or within the prohibited area, the height of the enclosure was to be nine feet. The court below, after a hearing on the bill to enjoin the erection as a violation of the restrictions, found that the whole structure, including the walls, will, when completed, constitute a substantial and integral part of defendant's house or building. Based on this finding, the construction was restrained as a violation of the condition.

The restriction here made was for the benefit of the plaintiff as well as all the owners of adjoining lots affected by its violation, and is enforceable in equity: Clark v. Martin, 49 Pa. 289. It will be observed, the language does not call for a space left "open and clear" or a "free unobstructed" view (Brock v. Atlantic Refining Co., 273 Pa. 76; Dewar v. Carson, 259 Pa. 599; Murphy v. Ahlberg, 252 Pa. 267), but is limited by its terms: Binswanger v. Hyman, 271 Pa. 296.

Ordinarily an owner has the right to build any structure on his land that is not or will not become a nuisance. This right may be limited as here, but because of the finding of the court below, in which we concur, it is unnecessary to determine the extent of that limitation. In support of this finding, the learned chancellor states: *Page 36 "There is no doubt the improvement is connected with and is an attachment or adjunct of the house. It is intended to add to its privacy and repose. The plastering, the method of construction, the height where it adjoins the tiled terrace, the location of the enclosure to the southeast, or on the sunny side of the house, its floor plan and steps, the facts that it does not extend to the property line on the side or in front and embraces only a section of defendant's lawn, and its general appearance and character, all suggest that it, when constructed, will be an integral and substantial part of the house and not merely an enclosed garden. . . . . . Moreover, a careful study of the photographs in evidence and oral testimony leads to the impression that, if the contemplated wall were in place, the casual observer must, as he looks at defendant's improvements, reach the inevitable conclusion that the house, with all its attachments, including this wall, constitutes one single, harmonious and homogeneous structure or unit. All would then be a building within the meaning and intendment of the restriction."

After careful review of the evidence, we are satisfied the court below did not err in awarding the injunction for the reasons stated. Restrictions that are limited should be construed strictly and against the party who seeks to enforce them: Crofton v. St. Clements Church, 208 Pa. 209; Binswanger v. Hyman, supra. Nevertheless, they must receive the construction which their plain and obvious language implies; if the wall attached to the house, is nothing but a room without a roof, it is in an ordinary sense a part of the building or an integral and substantial part of defendant's house, and so much of it as lies within the prohibited area violates the restriction.

The exceptions mentioned in the condition are steps, cellar doors, or open porches; this structure is not within any of these. The gradual rise as the wall reaches the tiled terrace, the location of the enclosure to the *Page 37 southeast, its general appearance and character, all suggest a building.

The question here is not whether in the abstract a garden wall is a building, but whether under all the facts of this case this construction is an integral part of appellant's house. We plant our affirmance solely on the finding of fact that the wall was attached to and made part of the house, the two together having the general appearance as well as the fact of being a building of one harmonious structure.

The decree of the court below is affirmed at cost of appellant.